A breathtaking account of Maori food - its traditions, ingredients and tikanga - from our brightest culinary star.
Monique Fiso is a modern-day food warrior, taking Maori cuisine to the world.
After years overseas in Michelin-star restaurants, Monique returned to Aotearoa to begin Hiakai, an innovative pop-up venture thatās now a revered, award-winning restaurant in Wellington.
Monique has also gone on to feature on Netflixās āThe Final Tableā, alongside 19 other international chefs, with Hiakai being lauded by theĀ Wall Street Journal,Ā New York Times,Ā Los Angeles Times,Ā National Geographic,Ā ForbesĀ andĀ TIMEĀ magazine, which named Hiakai in 2019 as one of the ā100 Greatest Placesā in the world.
This book is just as unforgettable: ranging between history, tradition and tikanga, as well as Moniqueās personal journey of self-discovery, it tells the story of kai Maori, provides foraging and usage notes, an illustrated ingredient directory, and over 30 breathtaking recipes that give this ancient knowledge new life.
HiakaiĀ offers up food to behold, to savour, to celebrate.
About the author
Monique Fiso
Monique Fiso (Nga Rauru, Ngati Ruanui) was born and bred in Porirua.
Starting with an after-school job as a sandwich hand at just 14, Fiso trained at the Wellington Institute of Technology while working the kitchen at Martin Bosleyās, before moving on to an array of renowned restaurants overseas.
She returned to New Zealand in 2016 and began the pop-up dining series called Hiakai, which evolved into the Wellington-based restaurant thatās taken the New Zealand food scene by storm.
Ā
āChef Monique Fiso is a special talent, a woman with a vision for merging ancient Maori techniques and traditions with modernist touches and a boundless imagination.ā āForbesĀ (The 10 Coolest Places to Eat in 2020)Ā
āNew Zealandās most exciting chef . . . innovative, sophisticated, thoroughly modern cooking with indigenous ingredients at its heart.ā āThe SpinoffĀ
āHiakai aims to shine a light on Maori cuisine, proving that thereās a modern home for it in the world of fine dining.ā
āNational Geographic
Ā
āFiso is one of a number of chefs in the Pacific making an eloquent argument for native ingredients and cooking methods.ā
āNew York Times
Ā
āA new perspective on traditional New Zealand food and one we can be so proud of sharing.ā
āStuff